Ontario Community Newspapers

Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 23 Nov 1933, p. 7

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s ;gflâ€""â€";fifmftfivmgw in ? s y,_a?fiifififi: Patic David Allen of Ellice township fl)pured before Magistrate J. A. akins at Stratford under a county bylaw by which the mdgiltrate is empowered to commit indigent perâ€" sons to the House of Refuge. â€" Thousands of overstout men and women find in Kruschen Salts a far better means of redncing than by 5&: druge.. The little daily dose of Kruschen Salts keeps the Organs energy instead of moping aroundâ€"+ and reduction follows as a matter of course. _ elle he alwaysâ€" says Kruschen +3 Photes ds " 1nt"" poodetiionich intubechee ? fgniiilfiwhifi;lfiéfi t.i"o;y ofiflg ve flfic y‘::ln‘wrt? p:ue{ el,e?eelin{":tt radiant vitality and vigor that beâ€" foreâ€" you know it you. are fairl "jumping out of your bkin" vqit{ BREAD 3 CENTS A LOAF A bread price war sent the cost of & 20â€"ounce loaf to the consumer to three cents at Saskatoon recently. Alderman Charles Nagh, a baker, blamed the development on the groâ€" cers, who, he said, offered specials in bread to their customers. DESTITUTE. FARMER â€" ‘COMMITTED TO HOME . IN STRATFORD Following receipt of letters from persons living nearby, stating that Allen was sleeping in a shed and in danger of freezing to death, Proâ€" vincial Officer J. Don;glns and Counâ€" ty Constable John Kirby visited a FARMER MISSING Thirtyâ€"nineâ€"yearâ€"old Guy Hazard, an Osprey Township farmer of near Owen Sound, is reported missing by his . wife. Hazard is eaid to have started on Nov. 8th for Meaford, 14 miles away,. . GALT MAN SENTENCED Acceding to Crown Attorney Bowlâ€" by‘s objection to the plea of defense counsel H. Meyers, Galt, that his client, Harold Johnson, Galt, aged 29, be given a suspended eentence, His Honor Judge Clement on Saturday sentenced the accused, who pleaded gullty to wrongful conversion of monies, belonging to the London Life Assurance Co., to six months deterâ€" minate and one year indeterminate thereafter. The thefts amounted to farm a short distance north of Rostock. In police court Constable Kirby stated that Allen, who is 68 years of age, had been found lying on an old mattress in a shed. Magistrate Makins ordered. the man placed in the Old People‘s Home. * One hundred junior plow»men and friends of York County attended a banquet in Vaughan Township Hall, Vellore, Nov. 10th. Andy McClure, Woodbridge, a boy less than 14 years of age, in compe tition with plow boys, under 16, throughout the county, won premier honore. 14.YEARâ€"OLD FARMER is VICTOR BANDITS GET $1,500 Victim of a eurprise attack by armed holdâ€"up men who leaped upon the runningâ€"board of his automobile as he drove through a lonely swamp near Chesterville, near Cornwall, on Tuesday _ afternoon, Thomas K. Bourke, 29, chief clerk of a subâ€" branch of the Bank of Nova Scotia at Morewood, was robbed of $1,500 of bank funds. Police from Cornwall, Morrisburg, Ottawa and Chesterville are combing the entire section but had found not trace of the robbers up to a late hour. DO YOU PREFER A QUIET HOTEL? Hotee Wavercey TORONTO If you DO, yOuU WiLL ENJOY HOTEL WAVERLEY AND IT‘S HOMEâ€"LIKE ATMOSPHERE. ' YOU WILL ENJOY THE TASTY, INEXPENSIVE FOOD SERVED IN OUR BEAUTIFUL DINING ROOM Cont PR hibA t waire ror roubtr Rates $159 up DIXIE DUGAN Miss Lawrence‘s table was decked with old Chelsea and primroses. The wax candles glowed under dellâ€" cate pink shades. The linen was inâ€" certed with strips of old filet lace. It was a feast planned for youth and love with a spinster‘s nicely dieâ€" criminating sentimentality. Kate, in her fastidious insistence on the fitâ€" tig, could have wished that Marah thad worn a white dress. She herself was in a soft shade of mauve the j colour of delicate artfulness. | Amy Everett, her niece, had ‘been the golf champion of the Fieldcrest Country Club at sixteen, and, as her greatest pleasure, broke in young horses at her father‘s Long Island ‘country place. She had calm, reguâ€" lar features; a healthy, pinkâ€"tinged akin; coarse, wavy, lightâ€"brown hair which seemed to stand straight out from her head with vitality, and the clear. candid eyes of a child. She appeared a young creature of courâ€" age, eelfâ€"possession and sincerity. The blue chiffon Parisian frock she wore, while highly becoming, was inexâ€" pressive, one felt, of her personality â€"the coquetry in its crafty folds was foreign to her nature. If she ever took overwhelming possession of a man‘s imagination it would he when she was dressed in rough coun: try clothes, standing perhaps on some windy hillâ€"top, silhouetted against the wide blue sky. Noither Waring nor Jack Barnes found her particularly interesting, but, if she observed this at all, it (did not in the Qleast affect her. straight: ‘Then Friday will be the night of my dinner. I am going to ask your old friend John Anstruther, and those two young men ‘who went to Marah‘s special preparations for the dinner were necessarily simple. She had only one black evening dress, modestly low in the neck, with long transparent sleeves. But she tled a plece Of black velvet ribbon, fillet like, around her head, in a fa: shion of the moment, and was gratiâ€" fied by the effect. It gave her head in profile even more of its subtle Egyptian euggestion. "Some night, when â€"you. are tru., when Mrs. 'l‘hgnu:g: ‘:v:hlll out. "But Cousin.Cora so very seldom â€"â€"* bégan the girl doubtfully; then her face lit upâ€" "Oh, yes! . next Friâ€" day che‘s m%:z to dine alone with Mre. Frank, because, Mr. Frank has to go south on a businesss trip." Bouth America for him, You know one of them; I believe?" ‘"Yes," replied Marah. She tried to meet Miss Lawrence‘s smiling reâ€" gard without any selfâ€"consciousness, but though she controlled her. eyes she felt her mouth twitch a little. "Then I shall ask my niece, Amy Everett,â€"such a nice girl! She came out this winter. That will make eix." * "I am not pretty," thought Marah with a sigh, "but I am differentâ€" and that is something." | _ "I belfeve so," Marah answered. She really knew very little about l Hugh‘s tastes or pursuits, for he was |never at home. It eeemed n nite for "I think I know a cousin of yours â€"isn‘t he a cousin?â€"Hugh Thompâ€" son." IHTS ARTICII She ate her dinner with appetite, serenely silent when no one spoke to her, but ready to break into fresh, delightful laughter at the least exâ€" cuse. She studied Marah, who sat opposite her, with what seemed a rather «pecial interest. "My brother knows him at colâ€" lege," she sald. "They are in the wame closs. I met him first at the New London race last year, and once he stayed with us for a Sunday in the country. He plays very good golf, doesn‘t he?" "Of course," said Marah, respondâ€" ing instantly, as she always did to uny friendly dvance, with a emile and a flush and a charactoristic warmth in her volce, "and such a nice boy!" â€" When dinner was over and the women were alone she said to her: Amy Everett looked at her calmly. Poseibly twenty did not seem to elghteen a boy. ed. a; little. Or..j call : a . ‘well: informed‘; woman. ~She * bout. t, with % knew a great deal, but never tlua mplacency, far she | much for hmltg;vl‘ mean . that e an inspiration, ~<|brain _ was ughly . ploughed, | whenâ€"you. are free, | planted, and: fertilised, as it. were, | peon is dining out."|but nothing had .come up." Miss / Ti n 8 REMOVED "You look very pretty toâ€"night," he sald, "mysterious and Oriental. I like that black band in your hair!" He smiled at her with something of ten: derness in his dyesâ€"a rare look. Marah, who saw in them for the most part only passion or analytical [keenness. felt her heart beat, faster. Perhaps he did really love herâ€"but did she love him? Was this vague, fcrever unsatisfied desire love? Was it the man, himself, she cared for, or his halfdivined, halfeuspected love for her? but nothing had .come ‘up." Miss Lawrence emiled to herself, reminisâ€" cently.. . "This young man seome v; cle ver and Ofllulngl." t i ds "Goodâ€"looking, too," eaid Marah, She ‘Widn‘t want to talk about Warâ€" ing, eo clung to Barnes as a subject of convensation. > p "To go back!" cried Marah, startled. â€" Or was it simply love itself she wanted, tenderness, protection, symâ€" pathyâ€"escape © from herself? She did not knows She had reached a siage in her relations with Waring when she was not happy either with him or without him, and she was inâ€" experienced enough not to know why. If he had taken her in his arms she would have understood herself and him completely. Later the men came in from the dining-ro&m and Waring sat down by Marah. "‘Too small," said Kate. "I like tail men myself, tall and thin. Now Mr. Waringâ€"" ~ "By the way," said Marah, mu}i "wae Mr. Anstruthor satisfied wit the resylts of the expedition? What did he say ?" ‘"He seemed fairly satisfied; in the results they obtained, they went far beyond the Von den Steinen expediâ€" ton of 1887. But it appears he wants them to go backâ€"" ‘"Not at once, my dear," Miss Lawâ€" rence hastened to reassure her, "not for eight or nine months." "I hear you are going back to South America?" she said, making her tone as casual as was possible. "Possibly, but nothing is decided, as yet. At all events it wouldn‘t be until autumn." "For longâ€"this time?" "Another year." "And would be glad to go?" "In a way, yes. Of course 1 am inmensely interested in the â€"re searches and explorations down there." Waring felt slightly aggrieved at the coolness with which Marah took the idea of his return to the tropics. It was more than indifferenceâ€"It was unconcern; if assumed, quite unworthy of her, he thought. Pricked in his selfâ€"esteem the thing assumed an undue importance in his cyes. "Yes, I see. It would of course be best for you to go back." With masculine arrogance he said to himself, for the thousandth time, that he would not be made to feel whatever was prompted by any woâ€" man‘s chance mood. "I dare say you are more or less acclimated by this time," Marah reâ€" piled easily. ("He is trying to make me show that I care about his going away!" she thought. "How contemptâ€" ible of him‘") And they exchanged a glance full of nervous irritation. "I will of course take you home," eald Waring, as if he defied her to make any objections. ‘"That will be like old timesâ€"in Southfleld," replied Marah. The menâ€" tion of Southfield always eoftened them. They looked back to it now ne an Arcadian spot of joy, innoâ€" "Naturally, the summers are the woret period down there," he said, "and we should be returning at the beginning of their summer." Across the room Kate Lawrence and Mr. Anstruther were likewlse engaged in that fierce, ineffectual attempt of two intellects to grapple with each other which is called conâ€" versation. Amy Everett was showâ€" ing young Barnes some photographs of her dogsâ€"It was all a pleasant «cene to look at. Marah liked Miss Lawrence‘s drawingâ€"room with the Chinese rugs and Chippendale furâ€" niture and old engravings. A wood fire was burning, as usual, on the hearth; there were delicately fraâ€" grant freesias in the flower vases; yet, in spite of everything, the evenâ€" ing ceemed to be a fallure. She sighed gently. "I don‘t know. Perhaps I am a li(tle tired." She epoke with conâ€" wclous pathos. He had really been too disagreeable. "How are you going home?". _ "In the Madison Avenue trolley." "Not alone, surely!" "Yes, Cousin Cora said it wasn‘t worth while sending a maid for such a little distance." ‘This time the paâ€" thos was quite involuntary. "But a young girl oughtn‘t to be Marah amiled. "I am not a very young girl, and not a society girl at all. That makes all the difference!" ‘"Why do you sigh?" asked Waring, combatively, observing the smooth fuirness of Marah‘s hand as it lay on her black dress. out alone at night!" During the German service in St. Mdtthew‘s Lutheran Church | next Sunday forencon Holy Communion will be celebrated. The preparatory service will commence at 10 o‘clock the main service at 10.80 and the Sunday School at 9 a.m. This being the last Sunday of the Church year, which is devoted to.the commemoraâ€" tion of those who have passed to the great beyond, fitting reference will be made at this service. _ Personals. fall of snow. . Theyare however, quite. concerngdâ€"about the shortage of the water eupply, which has been very. low since "last summor‘s drought. . e te ie Drought . of Summer Left Wells"in ._ . _Comestogo District Low. .. < _ Farmers are enjoying the excellent e o e Miss Elta Bartman of the Y.W. C.A.. Kitchener and Mr. and Mre. Oscar Bartman of Palmerston, were recent visitors of Mr. and Mre. Erwin Dahmer. "He was kinder in Southfield," Marah frequently thought after some unusual display, on Waring‘s part, of the insolent pride of map. Yet i they were of far more value to each other now than they had ever beon Mrs. Harry Brubacher of Kitchenâ€" er is spending the week with her parents, Mr. and Mre.. Wm. 8. Wright, t 9 l : Mrs Chas, Scheijfele is reported on the sick list. NS Mr. Oscar Huehn was a busiâ€" ness, visitor in the Twin City early in the week. wl Mr. Hu?,n. McKenzie, who has been living"on the former Sol. Koch furm midway between here and St. Jacobs for some time moved to Winâ€" terbourne on Wednesday of last week, while Mr. John McKenzie joined Mra. McKenzie in the Good apartments. > . Mr. J. Allan, an auditor of the Deâ€" partment of Public Highways of Onâ€" tario, spent last Wednesday in the village auditing the township road accounts for 1933. 5 _ Mr. H. Wittig of Tavistock spent over Sunday with his brother, Rev. 8. J. Wittig and Mrs. Wittig. > Mr. John Bartman of Gowansâ€" town, spent the latter part of last week at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Erwin Dahmer and Mr. Dahâ€" Mr. and Mra. Wm. S. Wright and son Oliver attended the funergl of Mre. Wright‘s brother, the late Henry Hilker in Kitchener on Saturâ€" day afternoon. _ Mr. John Jacobs of Milverton spent the latter part of last week near the village. mer MOTORISTS‘ NARROW ESCAPE When a car driven by R. Schedler of Kitchener, containing a party of local people, skidded on a hill on the _ Durhamâ€"Flesherton road on Sunday, Nov. 12, the passengers escaped serious injury when the car plunged over an eightâ€"fqot embankâ€" ment. In Waterloo Police Court recentâ€" ly, Gustave Krueger, Elmira, was found gullty of driving a car while intoxicated, and fined $40 which inâ€" cluded costs. Evidence was heard by Magistrate Weir on Thursday, when Krueger inâ€" sisted he was not drunk.â€" cence, and peace. "She was not 60 in Southfeld," Waring would say to himself when Marah seemed partiâ€" cularly evasive and unsatisfactory. in the old days. Possibly the spirit of their time had infected them withâ€" out their knowledge. Woman‘s bold claim to independence and gocial equality with man has faintly roused the latter‘s jealousy and fear. All this, if not consciqusly in the mind of any epecial man or woman, is in the atmosphere, polson or tonic as you will, but absorbed inevitably; and against this new condition comes forth poor old Nature, hard put to it, sometimes, to bring nbout her own piimitive ends. _ "In every piece of creative work the soul of one human being cries out, for comprehension, to the world." (To be Continued) If she had divined that they wore to leave the house together it might have consoled her, but of this she knew nothing. Mr. Anstruther had bored her deeply talking about the tectonic constitution of South Ameâ€" rica and the orographic system of the West Indies. When her guests had pli gone she gave a sigh of relief and eat down by the fire with Meredith‘s "Modern Love" for a few moments of mental delight and repose. On the flyâ€"leaf of this book Kate had writâ€" ten, in a hand fashtonable during the 80‘s, . Miss Lawrence‘s little dinner party broke up at an early hour. She was disappointed in it. Waring and Maâ€" rah had talked to each other, but not with much warmth or absorption, and she had been unable to surprise any of those soft, amorous glances which are a delight to the heart of the romantic and unwed. ADVERTISING In The CHRONIOL® BRINGS RESULTS. DRIVES CAR WHILE DRUNK . ~Mr. Albort Heim uul%' to W& 'tauoo after spending a fow days f b:flu (throuu Mu.huot Water. â€" MF, Jack Urose of Kitchoner visit. 0d with friends here on.Sunday. the s:dglem ts ‘Parish Hall on Wednesday evening, November 29th, â€" Mr. Henry Weber of Gueiph visitâ€" edâ€"hile mother, Mre. John Weber on Sunday, : Mr. Claude Beaupre returned home after spending some ‘time â€" with friends in Buffalq, N.Y. ; . . _ _ . Forty houre devotion was held at the St.. Cléments R.C. ?numnb&tn ning Sundgy and ending on Tuesâ€" day evening. , A dainty supper was given by the Superâ€"Health Aluminum Co., of Toâ€" ronto, represented ‘by N. Nagel of Waterloo, at the home of Mr. and Mre. Charles Koebel last Thursday evening. About eight couples were present. After the dupper Mr. Nagel gave a talk on Health, etc.â€" The reâ€" mainder of the evening was epent in card playing. _ _ â€" â€" Miss Alfrieda Voison of Waterloo spent the weekâ€"end with her parâ€" ents. â€" Mr. Norman Forwell moved his equipment to the gravel pit of Mr. Eugene Koebel after completing his contract at Listowel. He will again commence working there and comâ€" plete his contract with this townâ€" ship. s Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Schlitt returned home after their honeymoon to Deâ€" troit and other American points. Mre. W. Esch of Galt epent Friday visiting friends in the village. Miss M. Kerr spent the weekâ€"end at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J Kerr of Hespeler. _ Mr. Jack Jones and son John of Preston were visitors at the home of Mr. and Mre. R. Jones on Friday. Ted Woife of English Settlement spent Sunday at his home in the village. . Mr. and Mre. A. Taylor and famâ€" ily of Blair spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and ‘Mre. J. Cassel. Wm. Jones was a ‘business visitor in Paris on Saturday. Melvin Wolfe has returned to his home in the village after spending theâ€"past month at Little‘s Corners. Mrs. John Sapeworth and «on spent the weekâ€"end with relatives in Limerick. Harry Sully of Preston was a visiâ€" tor at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. Ohlheiser on Saturday. . The Ladies‘ Aid of the Presbyteâ€" rian church held their meeting at the home of Miss P. Watson on Wedâ€" nesday afternoon of this week. The Young People‘s sewing circle bheld their weekly meeting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Ayers on Wednesday evening. Lunch was served at the close of the meeting. A successful progressive euchre party was held at Gill‘s hall on Thursday evening. After the card games, lunch was served by the laâ€" dies. Later a dance was enjoyed by all. Rev. W. Patterson of Preston conâ€" ducted the communion service at the A social ‘evening will. be held in viing somp time fhero_conduch “"J & Abtort Hatm returtied to We‘ ~ @#:__: i It is recognized as the QUICKâ€" EST, safest, surest way to treat a cold. For it will check an ordiâ€" nary cold almost as fast as you caught it. m Ask your doctor about this. And when you buy, see that you get Asâ€" pirin Tnh{eu. Aspirin The simple method pictured above is the way doctors throughout the world now treat colds. ‘Take 2 Aspirin Tablets, Almost Instant Relief in ‘Does Not Harm the Heart How to Stop a Cold â€" Quick as You Caught It DOON Nofi y e By J. P. McEVOY and J. H. STRIEBEL Drink full glass of water. Repeat treatment in 2 Presbyterian church on Sunday afternoon, _ _ _ _ _ _ 0 _ Rev. E. R. Hall of Galt conducted the service at the United Church on Sunday afternoon. 4 School Report. The following is the report of the senior room of Doon Public School for October. Those marked with * have missed one or more exams. Sr. IV: honorsâ€"Mary Weaver, Kathleen Jones, Edward Jones, Reinâ€" hold Hauk, Walter Wright; Pase: Verna Goddard, Johnnie Rauckman. Jr. IV: honoreâ€"Gilbert Wilfong;| Jean Brown; Pass: Vivian Teet, Chester Goddard, RueseH Tilt*, Rarl| Lawrence. | Jr. III: honorsâ€"Arthur Borne, Lawrence Cluthe; Pasa: Dorothy Holt, Marjorie Lawrence, Donald Wolfe, Jack Worden, Bertha Nemeth, George Tilt. Sr. III: honorsâ€"George Jones, Wilâ€" lis Gill, Isobel Fisher; pass: Russell Kurt, Margaret Holt, Robert Schrank*, Earl Bryce, Willie Bryce*. only face en h;z.lxwodmmdwlmdieafln.w | is light and fluffy, yet it clings Jonger than any other powder, â€" Bexd enmaly wik y cnpieage Te â€" wil com Good Housekeepin 'O"M;""szn of Approval" is r guarantee 3 ymz)u'moox Gmr l’w'e' Powder and other Olive Oil Beauty Products are sold by leading drug, department and chain stores in 3 sizes â€"15¢, 25¢ and $1.00, If you want to sample five of the most popular OuTpoo® GirL. prepâ€" arations, mail the coupon below. , Wt jorns y n o faf en T nomg ty sad romgis Tou cay Jw n pecomgs: urpoon ts Pace Puader wil help your 1 enclose 10¢ to cover postage and huadlin%. Please send me your OutDoo® Girt. ‘‘Introductory Sampler containing liberal trial packages of Outboor Girt Olive Oil Besuty Products Name Address Ciy _.... is the trademark of The Bayer Company, Limited, and the name Bayer in the form of a cross is on each tablet. They dissolve almost instantly. And thus work almost instantly when you take them. And for a gargle, Aspirin Tablets dissolve so completely, they leave no irritating partiâ€" cles. Get a box of 12 tablets or bottle of 24 or 100 at any drugstore. with thisâ€"marvelous â€" ‘ Specialist: Nose, Throat, Ear. llve OIl Fage Powdar | ,C*U*erâ€"iInternal and external. Outboo® Girt Olive Oil Beauty Products * are sold by in Miss Mary F. Kerr, Teacher If throat is sore, crush and dissolve 3 Aspirin Tablets in a half glass of water and gargle according to directions in box. This Way aerimn tasuers anc MAD® 1M CANADA Prov | J. A. FISHER ADVERTISING In The CHRONIOL® MAURICE DALY, s ,"e#u. "‘tor, Notary. 58 ?IT; 8 & S‘;eollfl!r. Room. No. B‘th DR. W. J. SCHMIDT, Dentist, 69 5&1& St. E., next to Post Ohce. DBR, J. W. HAGEY, Dentist, Room 110 Weber Chambers, K“n. 8t, W., Kitchener. Phone 1756. , W. G. WEICHEL =â€" â€" President J. H. SIMPSON â€" Viceâ€"President Joseph Stauffer E. J. Bauer Oscar Rumpel Ford S. Kumpf W. R. Bricker Wm. Henderson, Sr. F. H. MOSER, Government Deposit â€" $100,000. Officers and Directors Coroner for GCounty of Waterloo: M. O. BINGEMAN, B. V. Sc. Veterinarian Graduate of Ontario Veterinary College and Toronto University. Specializing in Cattle Diseases, Blood Testing, etc. Phone Kitchener 745 r 32 Office 44 William St., Waterloo Phone 768w Shoe Repairing A Specialty. Expert Workmanship.- Prompt service and prices reasonable. Prices reasonable. Goods called for and dalivered. Teacher of Piano, Singing, and Theory. Private and Class Instruction. Studios: 48 Roy St., Kitchener. Phone 1171M. â€"__ a specialty. 00â€" _ fi:d mo{e :o&kl to yon‘r h‘:'lmt: V I:::,Adzn :nn':sI Â¥::’: h:n:- magazine bound into books. _ Initialing Club Bags, Suitcases, Rebinding Books, Bibles, Hymn and Prayerbooks J. C. Lehmann BOOKBINDER 17 Queen St. N. â€" Phone 2686 13 King St. N WATERLOO â€" MUTUAL FIRE C. A. BOEHM INSURANCE AGENCIES LIMITED District Agents. Phones 700 and 701 Waterloo, Ontario yA Bn. J. nicn%n' o + tdehfllcl' pecialist= g'&u. ‘Throat" Ka Shoo Store and Repair Shop. King St. S. â€" Phone 941 WATERLOO, ONT. Established 1863 ASSETS OVER $1,800,000 WILHELM‘S BUSINESS CARDS A. BOEHM INSURANCE AGENCIES LIMITED Mlnn'er and Secretary ISHER _ â€" _ Ass‘t Secretary ROTHARMEL _ â€" Inspector ener, Ont. CHIROPRACTIC Miss Anna R. Bean CHIROPRACTOR VETERINARY Insurance Company SHOEMAKING MEDICINAL ED. HOUSE‘S District Agents MUSIC DENTAL Kitchener Waterloo xt

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